As country goes to the polls, voting problems emerge

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Polling site officials, left, check on a voting scanner after it jammed, forcing voters to manually file their ballots until a repair was made, Tuesday Nov. 6, 2018, in the Parkchester community of the Bronx borough of New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

A polling site official shows a voter how to manually file a ballot after the electronic scanner malfunctioned Tuesday Nov. 6, 2018, in the Parkchester community of the Bronx borough of New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

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Voters cast their ballot in the midterm election at the Brooklyn Museum polling station in New York City on November 6, 2018. - Americans started voting Tuesday in critical midterm elections that mark the first major voter test of Donald Trump's presidency, with control of Congress at stake. (ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images)

Voters wait to get a ballot at a polling station during the mid-term elections at the Old Stone School in Hillsboro, Virginia on November 6, 2018. - Americans started voting Tuesday in critical midterm elections that mark the first major voter test of US President Donald Trump's controversial presidency, with control of Congress at stake. (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images)

People vote at a Harley-Davidson showroom and polling station during the midterm elections in Long Beach, California on November 6, 2018. - Americans started voting Tuesday in critical midterm elections that mark the first major voter test of US President Donald Trump's controversial presidency, with control of Congress at stake. (MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)

Drake University student Camryn Kubicki applies a sticker to her hat after voting at a polling station on November 6, 2018 in Des Moines, Iowa. Today's election will determine if Republicans or Democrats will control the House of Representatives. (Photo by Joshua Lott/Getty Images)

Voters cast their ballots at the Rummel Creek Elementary polling place on November 6, 2018 in Houston, Texas. Voters visited polling places around Texas on Election Day to cast their ballots in the midterms. (Photo by Loren Elliott/Getty Images)

Voters cast ballots at a polling station in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 6, 2018. - Americans started voting Tuesday in critical midterm elections that mark the first major voter test of US President Donald Trump's controversial presidency, with control of Congress at stake. (KEREM YUCEL/AFP/Getty Images)

Voters cast their ballots at a polling station at the John P. Holt Brentwood Library on Election Day November 6, 2018 in Brentwood, Tennessee. Turnout is expected to be high nationwide as Democrats hope to take back control of at least one chamber of Congress. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

A cable car rolls passed a polling station on Hyde Street as voters cast their ballots in San Francisco, California, on November 06, 2018. - Americans started voting Tuesday in critical midterm elections that mark the first major voter test of Donald Trump's controversial presidency, with control of Congress at stake. (JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images)

A voter gets her ballot at a polling station during the mid-term elections at the Aldie Methodist church in Aldie, Virginia on November 6, 2018. - Americans started voting Tuesday in critical midterm elections that mark the first major voter test of Donald Trump's controversial presidency, with control of Congress at stake.
About three quarters of the 50 states in the east and center of the country were already voting as polls began opening at 6:00 am (1100 GMT) for the day-long ballot. (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images)

Poll workers uses electronic devices to help people check-in at a polling center to vote in the midterm elections on November 6, 2018 in Provo, Utah. Utah early voting has been highest ever in Utah's midterm elections. One of the main proportions on the ballet in Utah is whether Utah will legalize medical marijuana. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)

Voters line up outside the polling place at Fire Station Number 2 on Election Day November 06, 2018 in El Paso, Texas. In Texas, Rep. Beto O'Rourke (D-TX) is in a surprisingly tight contest against incumbent Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) for one of the state's U.S. Senate seats. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Voters cast their ballots at the Masonic Temple polling station in Marblehead, Massachusetts, on Election Day, November 6, 2018. (JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP/Getty Images)

People stand in voting booths while casting their vote at the Montpelier Town Hall on November 6, 2018 in Montpelier, Vermont. Turnout is expected to be high nationwide as Democrats hope to take back control of at least one chamber of Congress. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

A voter enters a polling station at the Fiesta Mart grocery store in Austin, Texas, on November 6, 2018. - Americans headed to the polls on Tuesday for a pivotal midterm election seen as a referendum on the first two years of the volatile presidency of Donald Trump. (SUZANNE CORDEIRO/AFP/Getty Images)

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By Amy Gardner and Beth Reinhard | Washington Post

Civil rights groups and election officials fielded thousands of reports of voting irregularities across the country Tuesday, with voters complaining of broken machines, long lines and untrained poll workers improperly challenging Americans’ right to vote.

The loudest of those complaints came from Georgia, where issues of race, ballot access and election fairness have fueled an acrimoniousgovernor’s contest between Democrat Stacey Abrams and Republican Brian Kemp. Abrams, a former state lawmaker, is vying to be the nation’s first-ever black woman governor, while Kemp, the secretary of state who oversees elections, has faced accusations of trying to suppress the minority vote.

In one downtown Atlanta precinct, voters waited three hours to cast ballots after local election officials initially sent only three voting machines to serve more than 3,000 registered voters. In suburban Gwinnett County, the wait surpassed four hours, as election officials opened the polls only to discover that their voting machines weren’t working at all, voters said.

Both locations serve predominantly African-American voters, feeding worries among some voters that specific groups were being disenfranchised amid signs of record turnout for a midterm.

“Look at the people here,” said Gabe Okoye, chairman of the Gwinnett County Democratic Party, as he watched mostly black voters enter and exit the voting location. “See the demography of these voters.”

“If you’re going to play tricks anywhere, you’re going to do it here,” he added, noting the importance of the populous county to the final vote count.

The wave of complaints from voters came at the end of a campaign season dominated by concerns about ballot access and voting rights. It remained unclear Tuesday how many of the complaints were legitimate, how many voters were affected and whether the problems would affect the outcome of any races.

Some of the anxiety stemmed from a spate of restrictive voting laws passed by Republicans in recent years affecting dozens of this year’s closely contested races for House, Senate and governor.

Republicans have said the tough new rules are necessary to combat voter fraud. On Monday, President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions both warned against voter fraud, although studies have found is no evidence of widespread fraud.

Voting rights activists argue that the laws disproportionately affect young Americans and minorities, who tend to vote Democratic. They accused Trump of trying to intimidate voters of color.

The spike in reports of voting problems also coincided with heightened enthusiasm across the country to participate in this year’s races, with early voting tallies in dozens of states far outpacing those of 2014.

On Tuesday, elections officials in states including Texas, Alabama, North Carolina, Indiana and Georgia extended voting hours to contend with long lines outside polling locations. Some states, including North Dakota, were also contending with low supplies of ballots and voters still standing in line by Tuesday evening.

A coalition of civil rights groups reported receiving more than 17,000 complaints of voting irregularities by midafternoon – a higher call volume than in any recent midterm election – and referred many of them to state and local election officials, the groups said in a news conference in Washington.

Together, the organizations have deployed about 6,500 lawyers and monitors across 30 states to protect ballot access – more than in any previous election.

“Our goal is to make sure that every eligible American that seeks to have their voice heard is able to do so this election cycle,” said Kristen Clarke, executive director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, one of the groups that teamed together to monitor elections and run a voter hotline this year. Other members of the coalition include the NAACP, Common Cause and Asian Americans Advancing Justice.

Reports of broken machines surfaced in numerous states, including New York, California and Arizona. Complaints also emerged of voting machines flipping voters’ choices in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Texas and Illinois.

In New York, Corey Johnson, the speaker of the New York City Council, said the voting precincts were hampered by broken scanners in all five boroughs. Voters stood in lines with ballots in the rain – soaking the ballots and further complicating the process of using electronic scanners.

Voting rights advocates said some of the problems are the result of older equipment that hasn’t been replaced in more than a decade. The machines date back to shortly after the presidential recount in Florida in 2000, when Congress sent billions of dollars to the states to replace outdated equipment. Another round of replacement is overdue, advocates said.

Across the country, reports about huge turnout were punctuated with complaints about voters who faced obstacles to casting their ballots.

Voters with limited English proficiency in the Houston area said that they were being blocked from bringing an interpreter with them to vote, as required under the Voting Rights Act, according to civil rights groups.

Hector DeLeon, a spokesman for Harris County, which includes Houston, said he was not aware of complaints from non-English speakers about bringing interpreters.

In North Dakota, a voting rights lawyer said dozens of Native American voters were being turned away because of issues with their identification. Poll workers were rejecting identification issued by tribal officials, advising voters not to initial ballots even though the law requires it and discouraging voters from casting provisional ballots when they arrived without proper identification, according to Carla Fredericks, director of the Indian Law Clinic at the University of Colorado.

“After I caught a voter who was being denied his right to vote and told him to go back in and request a set-aside ballot, the election worker told me I was interfering and need to leave,” said Fredericks, a member of the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation, located in central North Dakota.

In Porter County, Ind., where Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly was trying to fend off a strong challenge from Republican Mike Braun, a judge ordered 12 polling places to stay open late after the local Democratic Party complained about tardy openings of up to three hours.

“It’s a matter a fairness to the voter, without respect to partisan politics,” said Monica Conrad, an attorney for the Porter County Democratic Party. Local Republicans unsuccessfully challenged the order by Superior Court Judge Robert Bradford, arguing that the Democrats had not provided enough evidence that polls opened late, said attorney Chris Buckley.

Accusations of intimidation surfaced after U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced plans to run a “crowd-control” exercise near a Hispanic neighborhood in El Paso Tuesday – the hometown of Democratic Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who is challenging Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in a closely contested race in Texas.

On Tuesday morning, the agency abruptly canceled the exercise after critics raised concerns about voter suppression.

The epicenter of voting anxiety was in Georgia, where the bitter gubernatorial contest has played out as an emotional battle over voting rights.

One voting rights group, Protect Democracy, filed a suit late Tuesday demanding that Kemp be pulled from his duties overseeing Georgia’s elections.

Tensions mounted in the weeks before Election Day after the revelation that thousands of voter registration applications had been suspended, most of them for people of color or immigrants, under a new state law requiring an exact match between the application and driver or Social Security records. Separately, hundreds of absentee ballots were challenged by officials, many in the minority-heavy Gwinett County.

On Tuesday, voters at one polling location in Gwinett County reported a wait of more than four hours to cast their ballots.

“This was voter suppression at its finest,” said Takeya Sneeze, an African-American truck driver who said she watched 100 voters leave a polling location at an elementary school without casting ballots after discovering the machines weren’t working.

Sneeze said she went to Walmart twice to get water and snacks to encourage people to stay in line and wait.

Joe Sorenson, a spokesman for Gwinnett County, said voting at the elementary school would be extended 25 minutes, but any further extension would require a judge’s order.

Sorenson said the county encountered problems at five polling locations out of 156. One had the wrong power cords and the others had issues with polling machines, but he said officials discovered the problems quickly and began issuing provisional ballots.

Brittany Herbert, 32, a lawyer, said she arrived at the Pittman Park Recreation Center in Southwest Atlanta at 8 a.m. and found the polling place in chaos. When she tried to check in, she was told she’d have to wait, so she left to go to work and returned around 4:15 pp.m. At 5:15 she estimated she had another 45 minutes to wait.

“Voting is always really important to me,” she said. “I knew at the end is the day I had to. I also knew that my family and friends would shame me if I didn’t.”

A spokeswoman for the Fulton County elections office acknowledged that a handful of polling places encountered problems Tuesday.

“Today’s election is a big one for this state and there are a lot of enthusiastic voters out there,” said spokeswoman April Majors. “We’re happy about that, but unfortunately the enthusiasm is what is causing the long lines.”

While Trump's relationship with much of his base remains strong, two years after his inauguration his ties are fraying with some voters, the kind who voted in droves for Trump in 2016 in key pockets throughout the industrial Midwest and flipped previously Democratic states to him.